The Day

Rays’ Franco moved to administra­tive leave

- By RONALD BLUM

— Wander Franco was placed on administra­tive leave indefinite­ly by Major League Baseball on Tuesday while authoritie­s in the Dominican Republic investigat­e the Tampa Bay Rays' All-Star shortstop for an alleged relationsh­ip with a minor.

The 22-year-old will be paid and receive service time while on administra­tive leave under an agreement with the players' associatio­n that did not set a timetable for a decision on whether he will be discipline­d by MLB.

“Just let the process kind of unfold,” Rays manager Kevin Cash before Tuesday night's game against the Colorado Rockies. “Probably not worth commenting any further.”

Franco was placed on the restricted list for a week on Aug. 14 while MLB launched an investigat­ion following social media posts suggesting he was in a relationsh­ip with a minor. The AP has not been able to verify the reported posts.

MLB said the shift to administra­tive leave was not disciplina­ry under the sport's joint domestic violence, sexual assault and child abuse policy. That leave is frequently set with a seven-day limit under the policy, but there's no such timeframe on Franco's leave and it's possible he will not return this season.

Ángel Darío Tejeda Fabal, a prosecutor in the Dominican Republic province of Peravia, said last week an investigat­ion into Franco was open under a division specializi­ng in minors and gender violence.

MLB is likely to wait until that investigat­ion is concluded before deciding whether there will be any discipline, a person familiar with the probe told The Associated Press. The person spoke on condition of anonymity because that was not announced.

Franco was held out of the Rays' lineup on Aug. 13 in what Cash said was a day off, then missed a six-game West Coast trip while on the restricted list. The Rays issued a statement Tuesday supporting the administra­tive leave decision.

Tampa Bay catcher Christian Bethancour­t said the investigat­ion of Franco is not a topic of discussion in the clubhouse.

“Actually we're not talking about it. Nobody is,” Bethancour­t said. “We're just going with it. We've got to play the game.”

Franco still has a locker in the Rays' clubhouse at Tropicana Field, but his presence around Tampa Bay's home ballpark is disappeari­ng. Photos of him were taken down, including a banner in the rotunda at the center field entrance that was replaced with an image of first baseman Yandy Díaz.

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